Online Encyclopedia

ERUBESCITE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 757 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ERUBESCITE  , a native

copper-iron sulphide, Cu5FeS4, of importance as an ore of copper . It crystallizes in the cubic
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system, the usual form being that of interpenetrating cubes twinned on an octahedral
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plane . The faces are usually curved and rough, and the crystals confusedly aggregated together . Compact and granular masses are of more frequent occurrence . The colour on a freshly fractured
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surface is bronzy or coppery, but in moist air this rapidly tarnishes with iridescent blue and red colours; hence the names
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purple copper ore, variegated copper ore (Ger . Buntkupfererz), horse-flesh ore, and erubescite (from the
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Lat. erubescere, " to grow red ") . The lustre is metallic, and the streak greyish-black; hardness 3; sp. gr . 5.0 . Bornite (after Baron Ignaz von Born, b . 1742, d . 1791) is a name in
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common use for this
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mineral, and it predates erubescite, the name given by J . D .

Dana in 185o, but afterwards rejected by him; French authors use the name
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phillipsite, after the
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English mineralogist, R . Phillips, who analysed the mineral; both these earlier names had, however, been previously used for other minerals . Owing to the frequent presence of mechanically admixed chalcopyrite and chalcocite, the published analyses of erubescite show wide variations, the copper, for example, varying from 50 to 70% . Even the best Cornish crystals enclose a nucleus of chalcopyrite (CuFeS2), and an analysis of these made in 1837 led to the long-accepted formula Cu3FeS3 . Recently, B . J . Harrington has analysed carefully selected material and obtained the formula Cu5FeS4 . Erubescite occurs in copper-bearing
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veins, and has been
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mined as an ore of copper' at
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Redruth in
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Cornwall,
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Montecatini in the province of Pisa, Tuscany, Bristol in
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Connecticut, Acton in
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Canada, and other localities in North
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America . The best crystallized specimens are from the Carn Brea mine and other copper mines in the neighbourhood of Redruth, and from Bristol in Connecticut . Recently a few large isolated crystals with the form of icositetrahedra have been found with
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calcite and
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albite in a gold-vein on Frossnitz-Alpe in the
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Gross-Venediger, Tirol . (L . J .

End of Article: ERUBESCITE
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